On 03.09.2016 17:17, Sean Greenslade wrote:
> On Fri, Sep 02, 2016 at 04:06:34PM -0700, Abrimaal wrote:
>>
>> 1. Analog B/W photos. Two lucky shots taken from the same position, one 
>> after one. Both images were printed on paper and after 40 years scanned. 
>> Photos were scanned in 8-bit greyscale, 600 dpi. The paper was the same 
>> size but not in a perfect condition (slightly folded). I was trying all CP 
>> detectors, each of them failed. I removed all the CP, added them manually 
>> and again the same error. 
> 
> If you added CPs manually, don't try to run CPfind again. Just move on
> to the optimization stage.

And it helps to have the lens specific parameters for the lens in use
saved as a default, sou you just need a handful of points to determine
yaw, pitch and roll (Optimize for position only).

> 
>> 2. Scenes with people or other moving objects. How many people were 
>> crippled or beheaded stitching in Hugin. Some other software has a 
>> possibility of graphical adjustment of the stitch lines. Is it possible in 
>> Hugin? Sometimes I take a photo for a panorama with a passing car or a 
>> human. I want to make two versions of the panorama - with and without the 
>> object. 
> 
> I agree with Gnome, use the masking tools. I generally only use exclude
> regions to cut out obviously-wrong areas, as that leaves the blender
> open to more options.

Additionally, use Edit->Remove control points in masks after defining
your exclusion masks.

>> 4. Partially solved. Straightening the car side views. Ideally a car should 
>> be photographed from the maximal distance, the smallest field of view, what 
>> means loss of quality. To straighten the side view I make copy of the 
>> photo, then I load both images and use Align Stack detector. I add the 
>> V-lines manually on buildings, not on 
>> the car. The rectilinear projection usually makes the image stretched at 
>> the edges, what is visible that the wheels are not round. The adjustable 
>> Panini general seems to 
>> be the best choice, but sometimes the final image requires re-scaling in 
>> another editor, it is too tall compared to its length. 

I have no idea here. It may be the field of view optimized by hugin is
wrong (maybe due to problems mentioned above) or your cropping
parameters are wrong or anything else.
Your pto and the images for it, provided on a service like dropbox, may
yield more and usually very competent feedback, though. Please do not
try to send your files as an attachment to this list: It will not work
and it may infuriate list participants.

With kind regards

Stefan Peter

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